DENMARK: Tier 1
Denmark is primarily a destination country for men, women, and children subjected to forced labor and sex
trafficking from Africa, Southeast Asia, Eastern Europe, and Latin America. Migrants working in agriculture,
domestic service, restaurants, hotels, and factories are subjected to labor trafficking through debt bondage,
withheld wages, abuse, and threats of deportation. Unaccompanied migrant children are vulnerable to sex trafficking
and forced labor, including theft and other forced criminality. Copenhagen’s relatively small red-light district
represents only a portion of the country’s larger commercial sex trade, which includes sex trafficking in brothels,
bars, strip clubs, and private apartments.
The Government of Denmark fully complies with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking. During the
reporting period, law enforcement authorities collaborated with foreign counterparts to convict more traffickers,
including through the country’s first use of a criminal code section that provides more stringent penalties for
convicted traffickers.The government also continued to identify victims and fund service providers. However, the
government’s default approach to protecting victims without EU residency was to repatriate victims to their
countries of origin. While an asylum process existed to protect victims who face retribution in their countries of
origin, only four victims have ever been granted asylum, despite the government officially identifying more than
200 victims in the last three years. No other residence
permit exists for trafficking victims, and a 2013 amendment that gave authorities the ability to stay
deportation in order for victims to assist in an investigation has never been used. The effective lack of
alternatives from removal impedes the ability of law enforcement to pursue traffickers and leaves victims
vulnerable.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR DENMARK:
Pursue a more victim-centered approach to trafficking by increasing incentives for victims to cooperate in the
prosecution of traffickers, including by providing temporary residency to victims while they assist law
enforcement; provide all victims legal alternatives to their removal to countries where they face retribution or
hardship, such as through a broader application of asylum status; vigorously prosecute trafficking offenses, and
convict and sentence sex and labor traffickers; sentence traffickers to imprisonment commensurate with the serious
nature of the offense; investigate why few trafficking cases are prosecuted compared with the number of victims
identified; take measures to prevent potential victims from being re-victimized, treated as offenders, or detained;
amend Danish law to ensure trafficking victims can be considered under a specific legal category exempting them
from punishment for all crimes committed as a direct result of being subjected to trafficking; expand law
enforcement efforts to proactively identify and expeditiously transfer potential trafficking victims from police or
immigration custody to crisis centers; and build on efforts to refer potential trafficking victims with illegal
status to crisis centers instead of first remanding them to police custody or detention, to facilitate trust and
increase identification among this vulnerable group.
PROSECUTION
The government made progress in law enforcement efforts, although the inadequate efforts to incentivize victims to
assist in investigations and prosecutions impeded these efforts. Denmark prohibits all forms of trafficking through
Section 262(a) of its criminal code, which prescribes punishments of up to 10 years’ imprisonment; these penalties
are sufficiently stringent and commensurate with penalties prescribed for other serious crimes, such as rape.
Authorities investigated 12 reported cases of trafficking in 2014, a decrease from 13 reported cases in 2013. In
2014, the government initiated prosecutions of 15 sex trafficking suspects, a decrease from 16 in 2013. Courts
convicted nine sex traffickers in 2014, and two additional 2014 trafficking convictions were still pending appeal,
compared with three total convictions in 2013. For the first time, the government used Section 262(a) to convict
two traffickers; the case was pending appeal at the close of the reporting period. Sentences for the convicted
traffickers ranged from 18 months to 36 months’ imprisonment. Authorities reported extensive cooperation with
foreign law enforcement counterparts in achieving the convictions secured in 2014.Although a 2013 amendment to the
Aliens Act allowed authorities to request trafficking victims without legal status in Denmark be provided with
temporary residency to assist law enforcement and testify
in a trial, authorities did not use this provision in 2013 or 2014. Country experts reported few trafficking cases
are brought to trial in Denmark because of the lack of incentives for victims to participate in the investigation
of their traffickers. Police receive instruction on trafficking at the police academy and again during their first
year on the job. The government did not report any investigations, prosecutions, or convictions of government
officials complicit in trafficking offenses.
PROTECTION
The government continued strong efforts to identify victims and fund care providers, but victim protection efforts
were impeded by an overemphasis on foreign trafficking victims’ illegal presence and repatriation. The government
did not implement efforts to provide alternatives to victims’ removal, resulting in few protections for victims who
faced harm and retribution in their countries of origin. While the government reported asylum or humanitarian
residence permits could be used as alternatives to removal for victims who lacked legal status in Denmark,
trafficking victims could not qualify for these provisions or receive these protections solely on the basis of
being subjected to trafficking crimes in Denmark. The government required victims to prove they were persecuted in
their home countries on the basis of Refugee Convention grounds. In 2014, the government approved two asylum
applications out of the 22 trafficking victims who applied; authorities granted two victims asylum in 2013.
The government continued to offer trafficking victims a 120- day “extended time limit for departure” as part of its
prepared return program for trafficking victims ordered to leave Denmark; the prepared return gave victims a
specified period of time to receive services before their eventual deportation. Regional anti- trafficking experts,
including the Council of Europe, emphasized this period does not refer to a period of reflection and recovery
necessary to determine whether or not victims will cooperate in the investigation of their cases; rather it is a
period of time the victims have to cooperate in their repatriation. In 2014, eight of the 71 identified trafficking
victims accepted a prepared return, compared with 11 in 2013. Few victims agreed to participate in the program,
reportedly based on the perception it was merely a preparation for deportation. Victims’ debt bondage to their
traffickers served as a significant deterrent from accepting the prepared return.
In 2014, the government identified 71 victims, compared with 76 in 2013. These victims included six victims of
forced labor and six children. Police referred 48 victims to care. Nine asylum seekers were identified as
trafficking victims and referred to care. Authorities did not officially identify any Danish victims in 2014,
though authorities reported having done so in the past and acknowledged other cases may have gone undetected.When
police suspected they had a victim in custody, they could call government anti-trafficking experts to join the
police questioning and explain the victim’s rights. However, one observer reported police officers’ de facto
standard procedure when encountering cases of prostitution was to check individuals’ immigration documents and
deport those that had entered Denmark illegally, regardless of whether officers had detected indicators of
trafficking. NGOs noted the onus of victim identification remained on trafficking victims, particularly if the
identification efforts occurred in detention settings during Denmark’s 72-hour limitation for charging an
individual with a crime. The government funded NGOs to provide victim care services, including medical,
psychological, and legal assistance.
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